With dominant win, Capitals rediscover swagger as they look to eliminate Hurricanes

Patrick Smith / TNS

The Washington Capitals' Devante Smith-Pelly (25) and John Carlson (74) share a laugh against the Carolina Hurricanes during Game 5 of a first-round playoff series at Capital One Arena in Washington on Saturday, April 20, 2019. The Caps won, 6-0, for a 3-2 series lead.

The Washington Capitals' Devante Smith-Pelly (25) and John Carlson (74) share a laugh against the Carolina Hurricanes during Game 5 of a first-round playoff series at Capital One Arena in Washington on Saturday, April 20, 2019. The Caps won, 6-0, for a 3-2 series lead. (Patrick Smith / TNS)

Stephen WhynoAssociated Press

Braden Holtby isn't one for grand pronouncements, so when he was asked if a blowout of the Carolina Hurricanes sent a statement, he put the spotlight inside the Washington Capitals' locker room.

“To ourselves, I think,” Holtby said, “to show that when we play that way we're going to be real tough to beat.”

The Capitals look as if they've found the swagger that led them to winning the Stanley Cup last year and can eliminate the Hurricanes in Game 6 on Monday night, while the Nashville Predators face elimination down 3-2 on the road against the Dallas Stars.

In a first round that has included three series upsets and two division champions already knocked out, the Metropolitan Division champions smell blood, and the Central Division champions just want to stay in the playoffs a few more days.“

We're still in it,” Nashville forward Viktor Arvidsson said. “We haven't lost anything yet, and we can still win two games and move on.”

Washington is one win away from the second round and a showdown against former coach Barry Trotz's New York Islanders. The Capitals blitzed the Hurricanes 6-0 on Saturday night, setting the stage for the chance to close them out on the road in Game 6 (7 p.m. EDT, NBCSN).

“You don't know the breaking point for any opposition,” coach Todd Reirden said Sunday. “This was a big part of our success last year, that we needed to invest and force the opposition to play a difficult game and eventually if you do it for long enough and you believe in the rest of your systems enough you will break them.”

After winning Games 3 and 4 to even the series, the Hurricanes look broken. They're without injured forwards Micheal Ferland and Jordan Martinook, and coach Rod Brind'Amour said it's “highly doubtful” rookie Andrei Svechnikov plays a week after being concussed in a fight with Alex Ovechkin.

It looked from Game 5 as if the Capitals had figured something out about the Hurricanes. Goaltender Petr Mrazek allowed six goals on 28 shots, and now the pressure is on Carolina at home to stem the tide from a playoff-seasoned opponent that knows how to finish series.

“We're going to be desperate,” Hurricanes center Jordan Staal said. “It's playoff hockey and yeah, we're facing elimination so we're going to be a desperate team and hopefully we play that way and we compete better than we did last game.”

The Predators are banking on that, too, after letting the Stars' top line of Jamie Benn, Tyler Seguin and Alexander Radulov run roughshod over them in Game 5 Saturday afternoon. Benn, Seguin and Radulov combined for more points in that 5-3 game than Nashville's top line of Filip Forsberg, Ryan Johansen and Arvidsson have all series.

But this is not a new situation for the Predators. They went into Winnipeg in the second round last year down 3-2 and forced a Game 7 back at home and will try to do the same this time (8:30 p.m. EDT, CNBC).

“I do think that the experiences that we've been through, they make us a little bit tougher in a situation like this,” coach Peter Laviolette said. “We shouldn't be deer in the headlights when a game like this happens.”

Even after losing T.J. Oshie for the rest of the playoffs with a broken right clavicle, the Capitals certainly won't be. They advanced in their first opportunity to do so in all four series last year on the way to the first championship in franchise history and have developed something of a killer instinct.

Game 5 provided Washington a blueprint on how to grind down Carolina, and anything close to that will let the defending champion move on.

“We are sadly mistaken if we don't think that effort and more is going to be required to win the elimination game against Carolina,” Reirden said. “We've got to again take our game up another level and I'll be challenging our players to do that in a difficult building. If we can do that, I think we give ourselves a good chance.”